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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
Stepping Away from a Toxic Workplace
Curative Culture examines the transformative role of cultural practices in healing and personal growth. Shaw explores how engaging with various cultural elements can lead to significant emotional and psychological well-being improvements.
Toxic workplaces are so common that most people don’t even realize they’re in one until they leave. That’s part of the danger: toxicity hides in plain sight. It’s not just about bad bosses or high-pressure environments. It’s the slow erosion of trust, dignity, and psychological safety. It’s that knot in your stomach as you step into the office. The chronic tension headaches. The feeling of walking on eggshells. It’s the place where people smile less, quit more, and stop believing their work matters.
What’s shocking is just how many people accept it as normal. Ask a room of average employees to raise a hand if they’ve never worked in a toxic workplace – chances are, you won’t see many hands in the air. That normalization is a problem. In mission-driven organizations especially, leaders and teams often tolerate dysfunction because the cause is noble. They work long hours, accept chaos, and excuse bad behavior because the mission is worth it. But the damage builds.
People start doubting themselves. They wonder if they’re too sensitive or not tough enough. Even strong leaders can lose their footing in toxic environments. They shrink, they second-guess, and their confidence quietly erodes. This isn't just about stress – it’s about spiritual bruising.
And there’s no way of sugarcoating it: you might be part of the problem and not even know it. Toxicity isn’t always loud. It can be subtle: favoritism, silence, constant urgency, or a values mismatch. Many leaders inherited toxic norms or were shaped by them. What’s “normal” for you might be hurting your team.
Recognizing toxicity takes courage and honesty. It also requires listening – not just to your people, but to yourself. Are you dreading Monday morning? Are you always on edge? Those are signs. So are high turnover, lack of feedback, and a fear of making mistakes. These are warning lights flashing on your dashboard. Don’t ignore them.
A team doesn’t need to be dysfunctional to be toxic. It just needs to lack care. As a leader, your influence shapes the atmosphere – not perfectly, but powerfully. People reflect the emotional tone you set. If they’re constantly in defense mode, innovation, collaboration, and trust will wither.
It’s time to stop calling “not bad” good enough. Avoiding toxicity isn’t the same as building health. The real opportunity – and challenge – is to create something that goes far beyond safe.
That’s where curative culture begins.
Curative Culture (2025) explores what it means to create a workplace that not only avoids harm but actively restores and strengthens people. It introduces the concept of a “curative culture” – an environment in which each individual is valued first as a human being, then as a contributor. Drawing from the religious principle of Imago Dei, or “image of God,” it invites leaders to shape cultures that recognize the inherent worth of every coworker.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma